wasn't perfect, no. but let's face it, we haven't done anything since 1986 in this area. it's a disaster on the border to deal with the asylum issues they did, i thought was incredibly important. >> did you think trump just wanted this issue? what that's why he killed us. >> yeah, i think that's part of it. part of it was some substantive differences, but here's the deal. it was incrementally good for the country. are you comfortable with him as the nominee? well, i stopped my decision to make urine ohio voter. >> yeah. i mean, he's he's definitely going to be the nominee. i i would imagine that he has a very good chance of being president to have you guys bought from well, i'm looking at the policies given position. i'm not going to vote for president biden. >> was it the right decision? do you think to impeach mayorkas? >> no. my problem with that. impeachment is that if you were to impeach somebody for following the policy direction of the white house rather than focusing on the white house, then you're going to have that happen again and again for tat, make no mistake about it. i think joe biden has been as a bad job on the border now, with that being said, and he's the blame for the border, you think
suspended the first three games of the season due to covid-19 recruiting investigation that the ncaa has been looking into, and then obviously the last three games of the regular season due to the sign stealing scandal. despite that, they've won every singl single game in front of them with or without harbaugh on the sidelines. alabama, it wasn't perfect, but they made the plays they needed to at the right time, converting in overtime, scoring that touchdown and stopping alabama defensively on fourth down. it was impressive and it's going to be a really fun matchup. >> if you didn't want to watch it on monday, now after hearing you give us those beautiful details, we'll all be watching on monday. so what in your view does this forecast, this year's championship pits the big ten versus the pac-12, it's the first time since the first college football playoff that we've been able to see the two
are, in some of the things he said were of their time, the things he said to dame helen mirren and meg ryan, he said he wasn't perfect but he got better and better and better. in his 50 year career on screen, it shows how incredible he truly was. indeed. we showed some of his best bets in that clip earlier. which interviews do you recall the most finely? it interviews do you recall the most finel ? , ., , interviews do you recall the most finel? ,., , .,, finely? it is not 'ust necessarily one interview. — finely? it is notjust necessarily one interview. a _ finely? it is notjust necessarily one interview. a lot _ finely? it is notjust necessarily one interview. a lot of - finely? it is notjust necessarily one interview. a lot of the - finely? it is notjust necessarilyj one interview. a lot of the clips you showed they are, the things we take out of those interviews, we got to know the celebrities on different levels. probably the back one. it was the first time that we thought they were quite funny. before that it was, what are they about? his
sportscasters say, the u.s. team has struggled a little bit at times. they struggled to get to the knockout stage. do you buy that? or do you think the competition is fierce and they're in some battles? >> i think it is a little bit of both. the objective is to get to the knockout round. they did that. as the fans, we don't like it. we want it to look better and feel better. sometimes you have to get there how you get there. you have to play ugly sometimes and win ugly. and that's kind of what has happened. wasn't perfect. we knew that wasn't going to be the case anyway. so now they're in the position they wanted to be in, and a chance to play in the round of 16 and move on. so i think kelly o'haira said, we've done what we did and now let's move forward and look to the future. what we have in front of us is we need to see from the coach a
it's giving image generators from big tech firms like open.ai, microsoft, and others, a run for their money in popularity and power. but stable diffusion doesn't have a silicon valley start—up origin story. it started here, in a leafy downtown corner of munich, and the way it was launched and created was completely unique to any of the other ai image generators. we're all really now looking over the shoulder of a development process which is super rapid. professor bjorn 0mmer was the lead scientist on the stable diffusion project. he and his team did their best to remove pornographic content from the two billion images that the al was trained on, but he admits it wasn't perfect. they also coded in a list of hundreds of banned words and phrases, but, of course, people quickly found a way to delete them. he defends their decision, though, to unleash his model onto the internet as open source. the dangers that you portrayed with open source, yes,
in popularity and power. but stable diffusion doesn't have a silicon valley start—up origin story. it started here, in a leafy downtown corner of munich, and the way it was launched and created was completely unique to any of the other ai image generators. we're all really now looking over the shoulder of a development process which is super rapid. professor bjorn ommer was the lead scientist on the stable diffusion project. he and his team did their best to remove pornographic content from the two billion images that the al was trained on, but he admits it wasn't perfect. they also coded in a list of hundreds of banned words and phrases, but, of course, people quickly found a way to delete them. he defends their decision, though, to unleash his model onto the internet as open source. the dangers that you portrayed with open source, yes, i... i see overall, like,
but stable diffusion doesn't have a silicon valley start—up origin story. it started here, in a leafy downtown corner of munich, and the way it was launched and created was completely unique to any of the other ai image generators. we're all really now looking over the shoulder of a development process which is super rapid. professor bjorn ommer was the lead scientist on the stable diffusion project. he and his team did their best to remove pornographic content from the two billion images that the al was trained on, but he admits it wasn't perfect. they also coded in a list of hundreds of banned words and phrases, but, of course, people quickly found a way to delete them. he defends their decision, though, to unleash his model onto the internet as open source. the dangers that you portrayed with open source, yes, i... i see overall, like, there's potential in generative ai, that it's a powerful technology, and powerful technologies can be misused.
it wasn't perfect. they also coded in a list of hundreds of bad words and phrases, but of course people quickly found a way to delete them. he defends their decision, though, to unleash his model onto the internet is open source. the dancers internet is open source. the dangers that _ internet is open source. the dangers that you _ internet is open source. tue: dangers that you betrayed internet is open source. tte: dangers that you betrayed with open source, yes, isee overall, like, there is potential and generative ai, it is a powerful technology and powerful can be misused, but closed source has not proven to be the way that would actually do this mitigation for us, because it has been either leaked or more importantlyjust been re— implemented. but leaked or more importantly “ust been re- implemented. but you must accept _ been re- implemented. but you must accept that _ been re- implemented. but you must accept that by _ been re- implemented. but you must accept that by making i must accept that by making yours open source, you have made it easier, very, very easy for people to download it and do whatever they want with it. of course. we made it easier and that is what we did, first offer losing it to the research community. that was something that was important to me, that the models were released to the
it's giving image generators from big tech firms like open.ai, microsoft, and others, a run for their money in popularity and power. but stable diffusion doesn't have a silicon valley start—up origin story. it started here, in a leafy downtown corner of munich, and the way it was launched and created was completely unique to any of the other ai image generators. we're all really now looking over the shoulder of a development process which is super rapid. professor bjorn 0mmer was the lead scientist on the stable diffusion project. he and his team did their best to remove pornographic content from the two billion images that the al was trained on, but he admits it wasn't perfect. they also coded in a list of hundreds of banned words and phrases, but, of course, people quickly found a way to delete them. he defends their decision, though, to unleash his model onto the internet as open source. the dangers that you portrayed
microsoft and others a run for their money in popularity and power. but stable diffusion doesn't have a silicon valley—startup origin story. it started here in a leafy downtown corner of munich, and the way it was launched and created was completely unique to any of the other image generators. we are all really now looking over the shoulder of a development process, which is super—rapid. professor bjorn ulmer was the lead scientist on the stable diffusion project. he and his team did their best to remove pornographic content from the 2 billion images that the al was trained on. but he admits that it wasn't perfect. they also coded in a list of hundreds of banned words and phrases, but of course, people quickly found a way to delete them. he defends their decision, though, to unleash his model onto the internet as open source. the dangers that you portrayed with open source?